Part 25 (1/2)
”Delighted. It will be so jolly to have you in the village. I'm not there as much as I could wish, of course. My other work keeps me so much in London. But Medley, my colleague, is an excellent fellow. He'll look after you in every way.”
”Who lives round about?”
”Well, as far as Society is concerned, we are a little distance from anywhere. Lord Fakenham's is the nearest house----”
”Not in that way, O'Donnell. I mean interesting people. Lord Fakenham is a bore--a twelve-bore one might say. I hate the big shooting houses in East England.”
The Rector was rather at a loss. ”Well,” he said, reluctantly, ”I don't know about what you'd probably call _interesting_ people. Sir Ambrose McKee, the big Scotch distiller--Ambrosia whiskey, you know--has the shooting and comes down to the Manor House in September. Oh, and Gilbert Lothian, the poet, has a cottage in the place. I've met him twice, but I can't say that I know much about him. Medley swears by his wife, though. She does everything in the village I'm told. She was a Fielding, the younger branch.”
The doctor's face became strangely interested. It was alert and watchful in a moment.
”Gilbert Lothian! He lives there does he! Now you tempt me. I've heard a good deal about Gilbert Lothian.”
The Rector was genuinely surprised. ”Well, most people have,” he answered. ”But I should hardly have thought that a modern poet was much in your line.”
Morton Sims smiled, rather oddly. ”Perhaps not,” he said, ”but I'm interested all the same. I have my own reasons. Put me into communication with the house agents, will you, O'Donnell?”
The affair had been quickly arranged. The house proved satisfactory, and Dr. Morton Sims had taken it.
On the morning when Mary Lothian had heard from Gilbert that he was returning that evening, Mr. Medley, reminded of his duty by a postcard from the Rector at Cowes, set out to pay a call and offer his services to the distinguished newcomer.
The ”Haven” was a pleasant gabled house standing in grounds of about three acres, not far from the Church and Rectory. The late Admiral Custance had kept it in beautiful order. The green, pneumatic lawns suggested those of a college quadrangle, the privet hedges were clipped with care, the whole place was taut and trim.
Mr. Medley found Dr. Morton Sims smoking a morning pipe in the library, dressed in a suit of grey flannel and with a holiday air about him.
The two men liked each other at once. There was no doubt about that in the minds of either of them.
There was a certain dryness and mellow humour in Mr. Medley--a ripe flavour about him, as of an old English fruit crushed upon the palate.
”Here is a rare bird,” the doctor thought.
And Morton Sims interested the clerygman no less. The doctor's great achievements and the fact that he was a definite feature in English life were quite familiar. When, on fugitive occasions any one of this sort strayed into the placid domains of his interest Medley was capable of welcoming him with eagerness. He did so now, and warmed himself in the steady glow from the celebrated man with whom he was sitting.
That they were both Oxford men, more or less of the same period, was an additional link between them.
... ”Two or three times a year I go up,” Medley said, ”and dine in Hall at Merton. I'm a little out of it, of course. The old, remembered faces become fewer and fewer each year. But there are friends left still, and though I can't quite get at their point of view, the younger fellows are very kind to me. Directly I turn into Oriel Street; I breathe the old atmosphere, and I confess that my heart beats a little quicker, as Merton tower comes into view.”
”I know,” the doctor said. ”I was at Balliol you know--a little different, even in our day. But when I go up I'm always dreadfully busy, at the Museum or in the Medical School. It's the younger folk, the scientific dons and undergraduates who are reading science that I have to do with. I have not much time for the sentiments and caresses of the past. Life is so short and I have so much yet that I hope to do in it, that I simply refuse my mind the pleasures of retrospection.
You'll call me a Philistine, but when I go to lecture at Cambridge--as I sometimes do--it stimulates me far more than Oxford.”
”Detestable place!” said Mr. Medley, with a smile. ”A nephew of mine is a tutor there, Peterhouse. He has quite a name in his way, they tell me. He writes little leprous books in which he conducts the Christian Faith to the frontier of modern thought with a consolatory cheque for its professional services in the past. And, besides, the river at Cambridge is a ditch.”
The doctor's eyes leapt up at this.
”Yes, isn't it marvellous that they can row as they do!” he said with the eagerness of a boy.
”You rowed then?”
”Oh, yes. I was in the crew of--74--our year it was.”
”Really! really!--I had no idea, Dr. Morton Sims! I was in the Trials of--71, when Merton was head of the river, but we were the losing boat and I never got into the Eight. How different it all was then!”